Passengers and social media users alike are outraged after a video surfaced showing Southwest Airlines bringing a taxiing plane back to the gate to kick off a previously unruly young girl and the toddler’s parents. Passenger Alexis Armstrong, who filmed the Southwest Flight 1683 incident, said the two-year-old girl, and a man who was likely her father were asked to leave the Chicago to Atlanta flight Wednesday prior to takeoff. In an interview with Law&Crime, Armstrong said the girl had a brief fit during the boarding process while passengers were still milling about and the man was told, “she needs to calm and sit or she will be escorted off.” The young child reportedly quieted down for five minutes and the plane pushed back from the gate.

A black man traveling on a United Airlines plane has claimed that a flight attendant agreed to give a white woman sitting next to him a $1,000 voucher for taking her feet off the tray table, while not offering him similar courtesy. “The audacity of white privilege,” Frederick Joseph, who started the ‘Black Panther Challenge’ fundraising initiative, wrote in a series of tweets on Tuesday March 13.

Sometimes plane travel really stinks. A flight from Dubai to Amsterdam had to make an emergency landing in Vienna after a fight broke out because one of the passengers wouldn’t stop breaking wind. The fart-induced fracas happened Feb. 11 aboard Transavia Airlines Flight HV6902 when two men sitting next to an apparently very flatulent man raised a stink about his repeated gas attacks, according to Fox News.

Footage has been released showing the moment a furious woman was kicked off a flight after complaining about being seated next to a mother and baby. Video of the drama was shared on Facebook by the mother, Marissa Rundell, who was on the flight to Syracuse, New York, from John F. Kennedy International Airport. The 19-year-old, who was travelling with her eight-month-old son Mason, wrote, “This lady thought she was going to be rude to me and Mason, now she has no way home today.

United Airlines removed Carrol Amrich, on her way to see her dying mother in the hospital, from a flight after a mishap with an online travel agency. Carrol Amrich boarded a United Airlines flight in Pueblo, Colo., hoping she wasn’t too late. Miles away in a Minnesota hospital, her mother lay dying.